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From: 	heb_roots_chr@mail.geocities.com
Sent: 	Tuesday, July 29, 1997 1:50 AM
To: 	Arutz-7 List
Subject: 	Arutz-7 News: July 24-28, 1997


From:          Arutz-7 Editor <editor7@virtual.co.il>
Subject:       Arutz-7 News: Thursday, July 24, 1997

Arutz Sheva News Service
Thursday, July 24, 1997 / Tammuz 19, 5757
------------------------------------------------

TODAY'S HEADLINES:
  1. NATIONWIDE STRIKE ENDS
  2. DEFENSE MINISTER: MORE MOTIVATION IN NEW RECRUITS
  3. LIKUD YOUNG LEADERSHIP MEETS WITH PLO YOUTH
  4. COURT ALLOWS PRAYER ON TEMPLE MOUNT
  5. CONGRESS MAY FREEZE PLO FUNDING
  6. EITAN REJECTS WATER COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATIONS
  7. HEVRON CONSTRUCTION HALTED
  8. JUDEA & SAMARIA TOWNS COMPENSATED FOR OSLO

1. NATIONWIDE STRIKE ENDS
The general strike by government corporations has ended.  The heads of the
worker's committees from the various striking companies met this evening
and decided to call the workers back to work.  Finance Minister Yaakov
Ne'eman had declared this afternoon that the strike was unnecessary and
unjust.  Travel had been paralyzed on commuter trains, and service
disruptions continued at Bezek, Israel's national phone company.  The
electric company had also been on strike, although the company reported
that all demand for electricity had been met.  In the wake of the railway
strike, the Egged national bus cooperative announced that female soldiers
would be permitted to ride on the Haifa-Tel Aviv route free of charge.  

2. DEFENSE MINISTER: MORE MOTIVATION IN NEW RECRUITS
Minister of Defense Yitzchak Mordechai visited the IDF's induction center
at Tel HaShomer near Tel Aviv today, and chatted with the young recruits.
Mordechai assessed that following the army's recent public relations
campaign, there has been a rise in the motivation level of Israeli youth to
join the army and volunteer for its combat units.

3. LIKUD YOUNG LEADERSHIP MEETS WITH PLO YOUTH
Representatives of the PLO's Fatah faction arrived this afternoon at Likud
Party headquarters in Tel Aviv, where they met with the party's young
leadership.  This is the first meeting of its kind at the Likud center.
The chairman of Likud's young leadership, Uri Aloni, had refused to divulge
details regarding the event beforehand for fear that this would lead to its
cancellation.  Likud MK Ruby Rivlin chastised the Likud young leadership
this afternoon for holding the session with Fatah members, asserting that
the very fact of the meeting proves that there is an ideological schism
between the Likud and the original Herut movement.

4. COURT ALLOWS PRAYER ON TEMPLE MOUNT
A Jerusalem court has made a revolutionary decision regarding Jewish prayer
on the Temple Mount.  The chief judge of the Jerusalem Magistrate's Court,
Amnon Cohen, ordered the police this afternoon to permit the head of the
Temple Mount Faithful, Yehuda Etzion, to pray on the site.  The prayer will
take place without a prayer book, prayer shawl, phylacteries, or minyan
(prayer quorum), and in silence.  Judge Cohen also canceled the
longstanding restraining order which had prevented Etzion from entering
Jerusalem's Old City.  The prosecution announced that it would appeal the
decision, and the judge ordered that his decision not be carried out before
Sunday in order to allow the police to prepare for the prayer.  Yehuda
Etzion declared that this was an historic decision.

5. CONGRESS MAY FREEZE PLO FUNDING
The US Congress will be debating an amendment to the foreign relations
budget this evening that would freeze, for three months, the transfer of US
government funds to the Palestinian Authority.  The legislation would allow
the President to release the money at the end of the three-month period on
condition that he report to Congress on the manner in which the PA honors
its agreements with Israel.  Lawmakers recalled that the PA has not
extradited to Israel terrorist murderers who have found political asylum in
its area of jurisdiction, that death sentences are being carried out
against real estate agents selling land to Jews, and various other
infractions of the Oslo accords.

6. EITAN REJECTS WATER COMMITTEE RECOMMENDATIONS
Minister of Agriculture Rafael Eitan has adamantly rejected the
recommendations of the Arlozorov Committee for dealing with Israel's water
crisis.  In a lengthy discussion today between water executives and the
Ministry of Agriculture, Eitan asserted that the committee's approach would
constitute a death blow to Israel's agriculture.  In his view, the
committee seeks to turn the entire coastal plain into a giant slab of
concrete, without a trace of greenery and without giving rainwater the
opportunity to penetrate the ground.  The minister also attacked the
sliding scale for water prices suggested by the Arlozorov Committee, saying
that it would force the development towns to pay twice as much for water as
would Tel Aviv.

7. HEVRON CONSTRUCTION HALTED
Following an order from the Civil Administration in Judea and Samaria,
construction work was halted this morning on the Beit Nachum V'Yehuda
building in Hevron.  Jewish residents had resumed work on the sites several
hours prior to the order, after receiving a construction permit for the
building from the Minister of Defense - a permit which was contingent upon
approval from the O.C. Central Command.  This morning, Hevron's Jewish
residents complained that Palestinian police had assembled, without a
permit, on the road above the Jewish cemetery and had, for all practical
purposes, taken control of the area.

8. JUDEA & SAMARIA TOWNS COMPENSATED FOR OSLO
The Finance Ministry will allocate to localities in Judea and Samaria 30
million shekels per year as compensation for expenses they have incurred as
a result of the Oslo agreement.  This was the conclusion of a meeting
yesterday between National Religious Party MK Tzvi Hendel and top treasury
officials.  An agreement in principle on this issue had been reached during
the tenure of the previous government, but had never been implemented.  It
was also agreed yesterday that the treasury would allocate a special sum to
finance infrastructure and job development in Samaria and in the region
south of Hevron.

*****************************************************************************

From:          Arutz-7 Editor <editor7@virtual.co.il>
Subject:       Arutz-7 News Brief: Friday, July 25, 1997

Arutz Sheva News Service
Friday, July 25, 1997 / Tammuz 20, 5757
------------------------------------------------

TODAY'S HEADLINES:
  1. IDF WAITS FOR PERMISSION BEFORE RESCUING 11 HIKERS
  2. JEWISH HOUSING ON MT. OF OLIVES APPROVED
  3. IDF VEHICLE ATTACKED
  4. FAMILIES AGAIN DEMAND EXTRADITION
  5. WAQF REFUSES TO PAY MILLIONS IN TAXES

1. IDF WAITS FOR PERMISSION BEFORE RESCUING 11 HIKERS
A group of 11 Jewish hikers were held captive by the Palestinian
police for almost two hours today, before the IDF was able to rescue
them.  The group was hiking in a wadi in the area of South Mt. Hevron,
near the community of Beit Haggai, when the armed Palestinians
approached, forbade them to proceed, and took them to a Palestinian
police force.  The area is in Area B, under Israeli security control,
but the IDF did not take action until it had received a special permit
from the joint command to enter the autonomous areas.  At about 12
noon, the IDF finally entered the area to reach the group of hikers. 
No further details are available at the time of this transmission.

2. JEWISH HOUSING ON MT. OF OLIVES APPROVED
The Municipality of Jerusalem has decided to allow Dr. Irving
Moskowitz to develop his land on the Mount of Olives.  The site, known
as Ras el-Amud, is adjacent to the eastern Jerusalem neighborhood of
Azariyah, which the Palestinian Arabs hope will become their capital
in a future Palestinian state.  The Arabs had hoped to have direct
access to the Temple Mount from there.  The original plan submitted to
the city called for a larger number of apartments but was not
accepted.  Later, the city agreed to a compromise solution in order to
head off large-scale protests by right-wing groups. 75 apartments in
two-story buildings will be built.  Internal Security Minister Avigdor
Kahalani said today that the government has no jurisdiction over the
plans or the land, which is privately-owned.  The Prime Minister's
Office released a statement today saying that Prime Minister Netanyahu
objects to the decision, and that he will attempt to prevent it from
being carried out.

MK Chanan Porat (National Religious Party) congratulated Jerusalem
Mayor Ehud Olmert on his "courageous and upright decision" to commence
construction on the Mount of Olives.  Porat said that only in this way
can we guarantee a Jewish presence there, following years in which
Jewish visitors have refrained from visiting because of the Arab
violence.  He criticized those who object to the decision, saying that
the matter of the unity of Jerusalem has become in their eyes only a
matter of theory. Moledet Party leader Rechavam Ze'evi also praised
the decision saying, "Israel can build in its own capital according to
its own interests, just as the English build in London without
consulting the Irish, and as the French build in Paris."

3. IDF VEHICLE ATTACKED
A firebomb was thrown at an IDF vehicle on the Halhoul bypass road,
north of Hevron, last night.  The car was damaged, but there were no
injuries.

4. FAMILIES AGAIN DEMAND EXTRADITION
In a meeting today in the Justice Ministry, organized by the Victims
of Arab Terror organization (VAT), family members of terror victims
called upon Minister Tzachi Hanegbi to demand the extradition of the
killers to Israel.  Yehudit Dasberg, whose daughter and son-in-law
Effie and Yaron Ungar were killed in a drive-by shooting several
months ago (their infant son was unhurt), said, "It is inconceivable
that the murderers of my children roam freely in Gaza for months, and
despite promises by the government, nothing is being done to extradite
them."  VAT President Shifra Hoffman declared that it is the duty of
the IDF to provide security for Israeli citizens, and not to "send a
fox to watch the chicken coop."

5. WAQF REFUSES TO PAY MILLIONS IN TAXES
The Muslim Waqf, responsible for the Temple Mount and Moslem affairs
in eastern Jerusalem, has decided not to pay its debt of millions of
shekels to Israeli income tax authorities.  Adnan Husseini, head of
the Waqf, has even threatened that any attempt by the authorities to
physically collect the debt will be met with a "violent" response.  He
said that Israel is a "conqueror," and he does not recognize its
authority to collect taxes.


************************************************************************

Date:          Sun, 27 Jul 1997 18:09:34 +0300
From:          Arutz-7 Editor <editor7@virtual.co.il>
Subject:       Arutz-7 News: Sunday, July 27, 1997

Arutz Sheva News Service
Sunday, July 27, 1997 / Tammuz 22, 5757 
------------------------------------------------

TODAY'S HEADLINES:
  1. NETANYAHU OPPOSES CONSTRUCTION ON MOUNT OF OLIVES
  2. MORDECHAI FAVORED BUILDING AT RAS AL-AMUD 
  3. BARAK FAVORED CONSTRUCTION ON MOUNT OF OLIVES
  4. IDF CAPTURES TERRORIST IN PA-CONTROLLED AREA 
  5. PREPARING TO RENEW THE NEGOTIATIONS
  6. NETANYAHU CONCERNED ABOUT POSSIBLE U.S. REACTION 
  7. CONTINUED VIOLENCE IN HEVRON
  8. IDF EXPLODES ILLEGAL TUNNEL

1. NETANYAHU OPPOSES CONSTRUCTION ON MOUNT OF OLIVES
Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, at today's weekly cabinet meeting,
announced his opposition to the construction of the proposed Jewish
housing project in the Mount of Olives area.  The plan was approved by
the Jerusalem municipality last week.  Ministers Rabbi Yitzchak Levy,
Ariel Sharon, Rafael Eitan, and Zevulun Hammer demanded that Jewish
philanthropist Dr. Irving Moskowitz be allowed to build the new
neighborhood.  Transportation Minister Levy rejects the claim that the
project is ill-timed.  "The rebuilding of Jerusalem cannot be linked
to matters of 'timing,'" he said.  Minister of Public Security Avigdor
Kahalani, on the other hand, feels that the planned building on the
site, which the Arabs call Ras al-Amud, should be postponed until the
completion of the construction of thousands of housing units for Arab
residents of Jerusalem.  

The Land of Israel Front in the Knesset, made up of MKs from various
coalition parties, has come out against the Prime Minister's
opposition to the planned construction.  Chairman of the Front Michael
Kleiner said that if they are forced to choose between the wholeness
of the coalition and that of Jerusalem, they will choose Jerusalem. 
Dr. Moskowitz stated today, "The entire subject of whether I should
build or not is ludicrous, because this is a democratic country, and
in any country of the world where there is a democracy, an owner of a
piece of land is allowed to build on that land, especially when he has
a permit to build."

Arutz-7 has obtained the transcript of a Jerusalem Planning and
Construction Committee meeting held on September 26, 1993.  Then-Mayor
Teddy Kollek said at the meeting, " I support the building and
development of the Ras al-Amud area in principle, and I have no
problem with building in the area.  Just to remind you that what is
involved is land that has been owned by Jews for almost 100 years. 
And if I objected to these activities [i.e. Jewish construction] in
Silwan, there is no comparison to this area.  I am certainly in favor
of building there.  But I think that the plans are still not ready,
and so I would like to put the matter off until the next meeting."

President Ezer Weizmann will meet with Jerusalem Mayor Ehud Olmert at
the president's residence this evening.  The president's office claims
that this meeting has been scheduled for some time.

2. MORDECHAI FAVORED BUILDING AT RAS AL-AMUD
During the election campaign, Minister of Defense Yitzchak Mordechai
came out strongly in favor of construction of the Mt. of Olives Jewish
neighborhood.  In a TV interview on the nightly news program 'Mabat'
on February 18, 1996, Mordechai attacked the Labor party for
preventing the construction of the Jewish neighborhood, and for not
closing PLO offices still active in Jerusalem.  Responding to the
question, "Where do you see evidence of the Labor party's intention to
divide Jerusalem, as stated in the Likud campaign?" Mordechai said,
"The proof is clear.  The very fact of the talks, and that Palestinian
institutions in Jerusalem have not been shut down... and most of all,
they [the Labor leaders] are not allowing massive construction in
Jerusalem.  Because they are preventing construction at Ras al-Amud,
along the Kidron and in other places, they are enabling the creation
of a corridor through which it will be able to enter Jerusalem...  I
hereby declare that when the Likud is elected and forms the next
government, we will make sure that these matters end: no more
corridors, no more freeze on construction...  Look what is happening
at Ras al-Amud; they won't allow the construction of 130 houses there.
 Look how many plans of the Jerusalem Municipality have not yet been
implemented. What is being implemented today are plans from the time
of the Likud, from the time of Arik Sharon and now of Mayor Ehud
Olmert.  Apparently, it will be left to us - the Likud government
headed by Bibi Netanyahu - to put all these plans into effect."

3. BARAK FAVORED CONSTRUCTION ON MOUNT OF OLIVES
When Ehud Barak was Minister of the Interior in the previous
government, he stated that there was no reason not to go ahead with
plans to build the proposed Jewish neighborhood on the Mt. of Olives. 
A letter from Barak's legal advisor, Shalom Zinger, sent on October
23, 1995,  informed the Ateret Cohanim organization's attorney, "The
Minister of the Interior instructed me to examine your complaint and
to respond.  After looking into the matter, I have discovered that
there is no impediment, political or otherwise, to continue the plans
to build in the Ras al-Amud neighborhood."
 The letter goes on to say that instructions to this effect had been
given to Mr. Eli Suissa, Head of the Jerusalem district in the Ministry of
the Interior, and currently Minister of the Interior.

4. IDF CAPTURES TERRORIST IN PA-CONTROLLED AREA
Islamic Jihad activist Rasan Mahmud Abed al-Rahim Mehadawi, 24, was
captured by an IDF undercover unit at a coffee shop in Tulkarm, a city
under the control of the Palestinian Authority.  Mehadawi was arrested
in September 1990 after admitting to stabbing an Acre resident.  He
was sentenced to 17 years in prison.  Last August, Mehadawi tunneled
out from Ashmoret prison together with another Jihad activist Toufiq
Zaban.  Zaban found asylum in Jericho.  Immediately following his
escape, Mehadawi resumed his Islamic Jihad activities in Judea and
Samaria, and organized terror squads to carry out attacks.  Arutz-7
correspondent Haggai Huberman reports that recent interrogations of
Palestinians associated with Mehadawi revealed that he was involved in
extensive terrorist activity, including the planning and execution of
attacks and attempts to acquire explosives.  

In September 1996, Mehadawi was arrested by Jibril Rajoub's security
forces while in possession of weapons and explosives.  He was released
a short time later, and is known to have been staying in the Tulkarm
area since May of this year while continuing his terror activities. 
According to Palestinian sources, as Mehadawi exited a coffee shop in
the middle of Tulkarm on Thursday night, undercover members of an IDF
commando unit who had been seated next to him subdued him, shoved him
into a waiting car, and sped away - all in a matter of seconds.

5. PREPARING TO RENEW THE NEGOTIATIONS
The special envoy to the Israeli-Palestinian talks, Dennis Ross, will
be arriving this week in the Middle East in an attempt to renew the
negotiations between the sides.  Foreign Minister David Levy will meet
today with senior Palestinian Authority official Nabil Sha'ath to hear
a report from him on what steps the Palestinian Authority has taken to
deal with the Palestinian police terror squads.

6. NETANYAHU CONCERNED ABOUT POSSIBLE U.S. REACTION
Prime Minister Netanyahu is worried about the American reaction to his
refusal to freeze construction in the Jewish townships in Judea,
Samaria, and Gaza.  Israeli daily Ha'aretz reports that the Prime
Minister told persons close to him that he could not agree to the U.S.
demands, due to coalition considerations.  According to Ha'aretz, the
most likely U.S. action would be for the U.S. to distance itself from
the negotiations. The Prime Minister spoke with American Jewish
leaders on Friday in an attempt to create positive public opinion for
the Israeli position.   

7. CONTINUED VIOLENCE IN HEVRON
Hevron continues to be the site of Palestinian violence.  An IDF
patrol discovered the remainders of a pipe bomb thrown from the H-1
(Palestinian) area into the H-2 (Jewish) area.  Jewish residents of
the adjacent neighborhood heard the blast in the course of the night. 
Four firebombs were thrown last night in Hevron as well.  No damage or
injuries were reported.

8. IDF EXPLODES ILLEGAL TUNNEL
The IDF engineering corps blew up a tunnel uncovered along Israel's
southern border between the two parts of the city of Rafiah this
morning. The tunnel connected the Palestinian side with the Egyptian
side of the city.  An IDF spokesman reported that the tunnel was
uncovered as part of intense operational activities to find tunnels
used for smuggling from Egyptian territory to the areas of the
Palestinian Authority.

**************************************************************************

Date:          Mon, 28 Jul 1997 20:17:14 +0300
From:          Arutz-7 Editor <editor7@virtual.co.il>
Subject:       Arutz-7 News: Monday, July 28, 1997

Arutz Sheva News Service
Monday, July 28, 1997 / Tammuz 23, 5757 
------------------------------------------------

TODAY'S HEADLINES:
  1. GOV'T DIVIDED OVER MOUNT OF OLIVES NEIGHBORHOOD
  2. PM MEETS FACE TO FACE WITH COALITION
  3. JORDAN VALLEY TARGETED FOR HOUSING
  4. PUBLIC CONSTRUCTION HELD UP IN YESHA TOWNS
  5. ENTRENCHMENT OF THE GOLAN LAW IS FIRM
  6. WESTERN WALL DIGGINGS COMPLETED
  7. ISLAMIC LEADERS: NO PRAYER FOR JEWS ON TEMPLE MOUNT
  8. RECESS IS RECESS
  9. RISE IN TOURISM

1. GOV'T DIVIDED OVER MOUNT OF OLIVES NEIGHBORHOOD
Prime Minister Netanyahu communicated today to President Mubarak of
Egypt that he is opposed to new construction in Jerusalem at the
present time. Foreign Minister David Levy stated this afternoon that
Jewish construction in the neighborhood should be held up as long as
negotiations with the Palestinians are still going on.  Levy, who
spoke with reporters following a session of the Knesset Foreign
Affairs and Defense Committee, also attacked his fellow ministers for
voting against the official government position on the entrenchment of
the Golan Law.  He said that their behavior was unprecedented. 

Earlier, Minister of National Infrastructures Ariel Sharon said that
Prime Minister Netanyahu's apology to Arafat over the decision to
build on the Mount of Olives was uncalled-for, and that it weakened
Israel's position and created a new hitherto unheard of situation in
which Israel must seek permission from Arafat to build in Jerusalem. 
Sharon stated that this constitutes a regression from the positions of
all previous governments in the past.  Minister Sharon also cautioned
concerning the widespread illegal Arab construction in Jerusalem.  The
members of the Knesset Land of Israel Front will soon arrive at the
site of the planned Jewish neighborhood on the Mount of Olives, where
they will hold a press conference in support of construction there.

2. PM MEETS FACE TO FACE WITH COALITION
The Prime Minister held a three-hour meeting this afternoon in his
office with 66 Knesset members of the coalition parties.  Mr.
Netanyahu said during the meeting that the cabinet, and not the
Jerusalem municipality should be the one to decide on building in
Jerusalem.  He said that the government would reinforce the Jewish
townships in Judea, Samaria and Gaza and in Jerusalem "at the
appropriate time."  Representatives of the National Religious Party
demanded that construction on the Mount of Olives begin immediately.

3. JORDAN VALLEY TARGETED FOR HOUSING
Dozens of new families have moved to the Jordan Valley in the past few
months as part of a campaign to increase settlement of the area.  Some
1500 families have called the offices of the campaign to check into
the possibility of moving to the Jordan Valley.  A construction
project of two hundred and fifty homes in the Jordan Valley is now
getting underway. 

4. PUBLIC CONSTRUCTION HELD UP IN YESHA TOWNS
There has not been a single new construction project since the
beginning of the year in any of the Jewish urban townships in Judea,
Samaria and Gaza. So is the report which emerges from an internal
Ministry of Housing paper obtained by Arutz-7.  While the ministry has
issued public tenders for the construction of 1,082 housing units, the
actual construction has been held up.  There are, however, a number of
ongoing private construction projects in the urban settlements. 

5. ENTRENCHMENT OF THE GOLAN LAW IS FIRM
Speaker of the Knesset Dan Tichon has announced his decision not to
hold a re-vote on the entrenchment of the Golan Law.  Opposition MKs
had demanded that Tichon cancel the original vote on MK Eliezer
Zandberg's law which passed 43 to 40, claiming that Tichon had taken
advantage of the absence of opposition MKs from the Knesset plenum to
railroad the law through.  Video tapes showed that the vote was held
in accordance with Knesset procedure, despite the noise and lack of
order in the plenum at the time of the vote. 

6. WESTERN WALL DIGGINGS COMPLETED
The archeological excavations at the King's Valley project near the
Western Wall of the Temple Mount have been completed.  The excavations
took three years at a cost of 55 million shekels.  Among the
discoveries at the site: remnants of Herodian edifices towards the end
of the Second Temple and from the period of the destruction of the
Second Temple.  In addition, drainage canals and ritual baths used by
pilgrims to Jerusalem were also found.  The Antiquities Authority
declared that the excavations at the King's Valley site are among the
most important ever conducted in Israel.  The site will soon be opened
to visitors, and it is estimated that a half a million tourists will
visit it each year.

7. ISLAMIC LEADERS: NO PRAYER FOR JEWS ON TEMPLE MOUNT
The Chairman of the Islamic Endowment in Jerusalem, Adnan Al Husseini,
has warned that Islam will never, under any circumstances, agree to
Jews praying on the Temple Mount.  In an interview with Voice of
Palestine Radio, Husseini threatened to use violence against Jews if
they attempt to pray on the Temple Mount.  He accused the rabbis of
Yesha (Judea, Samaria and Gaza) of being responsible for the attempts
by Jews to pray on the Mount.  Additionally, the sheikh in the Al-Aqsa
mosque attacked the decision by the Supreme Court to allow Yehuda
Etzion to pray on the Temple Mount in last Friday's sermon.  "We will
not stand idly by," threatened the sheikh, "and we refuse to obey the
decisions of this racist court.  The rabbis will not enter the Al-Aqsa
mosque, not over our dead bodies and shrouds." His speech was
broadcast live on Voice of Palestine Radio. 

8. RECESS IS RECESS
In response to a Labor party announcement that it would convene the
Knesset for no-confidence motions during the summer recess, Knesset
Secretary Aryeh Hahn says that it is not only a custom, but also a
firm part of the Knesset code not to hold such votes during the summer
break.  Hahn told Arutz-7 that the Knesset has never held votes of
no-confidence during the recess period in its entire history.

9. RISE IN TOURISM
Finally a rise in incoming tourism.  The past two months has seen a
5-7% increase in the number of foreign tourists visiting Israel. 
Minister of Tourism Moshe Katzav says that these figures give rise to
optimism. According to Katzav's estimate, Israel will reach four
million foreign tourists per year within three years.  He added that
he is opposed to the new anti-missionary law because it might
adversely affect tourism. 

Today's Radio News Editor: Haggai Segal

TUNE IN TO ARUTZ SHEVA'S ENGLISH BROADCASTS
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This week: Call-in show with special guest Rabbi Dr. Moshe Tendler,
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Assimilation and Assimilationists

==================================
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